Duvall v. Duncan

111 S.W.2d 89, 341 Mo. 1129, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 399
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 17, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 111 S.W.2d 89 (Duvall v. Duncan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duvall v. Duncan, 111 S.W.2d 89, 341 Mo. 1129, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 399 (Mo. 1937).

Opinions

Action in two counts, the first in ejectment, the second to quiet title. The land described in both counts is the same. The case was tried to a jury. The verdict was for defendants below, respondents here, on both counts, and judgment went accordingly. Plaintiffs appealed.

Plaintiffs (husband and wife) claim title under a trustee's deed to them, made pursuant to sale under a deed of trust dated June 1, 1933, acknowledged June 9, 1933, securing a note of $2650, dated June 1, 1933, signed by the Duncans, husband and wife. No question is raised as to the regularity of the foreclosure proceedings or that the trustee's deed is not sufficient on its face to convey title. After the foreclosure sale defendants, theretofore owners and in possession of the lands in question, refused to surrender possession and this suit followed. The only question presented on this appeal is whether or not there was a valid consideration for said $2650 note. Defendants claim said note was without consideration and that the deed of trust securing it was therefore without consideration and invalid and the sale thereunder unauthorized and void.

The note in question was held at the time of the foreclosure by W.F. Duvall, who had acquired it from the Farmers Bank of Bates County, the named payee. The question of consideration requires a statement of facts leading up to the giving of the note.

In May, 1927, W.F. Duvall was president of said bank, Homer Duvall was an active officer thereof. Defendant W.E. Duncan was and for some years had been a customer of the bank, transacting his business with the bank, he says, through Homer Duvall as the bank's representative. He was largely indebted to the bank, the bank records showing a then total indebtedness of $4400, part of which was secured by chattel mortgage but the major part unsecured. He and his wife also owed debts to other parties secured by deeds of trust on property not here involved. It appears that foreclosure of a deed or deeds of trust on said other properties was being threatened by the holder or holders thereof — not by said Farmers Bank.

In this situation on May 11, 1927, the Duncans executed two notes one for $2000 due in two years and one for $3000 due in three years, payable to the bank, and as security therefor a deed of trust on the property here in question. The $3000 note was immediately turned over to Mrs. Duncan. It was never claimed by the bank as an asset or as collateral and for practical purposes may be treated as having dropped out of the case. The $2000 note was retained by the bank, which has at all times since claimed, as do plaintiffs herein, that the bank took and held that note as collateral for Duncan's unsecured debts to it.

The testimony of the Duncans was to the effect that said $2000 note was not given as collateral and was not to be considered as *Page 1133 belonging to the bank but was left with the bank or with Homer Duvall to keep for them — the Duncans — sort of as mere custodian, but not as owner in any sense. They say that the $3000 and $2000 notes and the deed of trust securing them were made at the suggestion of Homer Duvall, their trusted friend, who advised them that if the threatened foreclosure of the deeds of trust on other properties went to consummation, it might result in a deficit in payment of those debts, with remaining liability against them for such deficit and possible subjection of the real estate here involved, (then unincumbered), to payment of such deficit. While rather glossed over the effect of their testimony on this subject, we think, may fairly be said to be that said $3000 and $2000 notes and the deed of trust securing them were given for the sole purpose of "covering up" the property in question from possible, — and feared, — claims of creditors other than the bank. As to the $3000 note the bank seems to have been in a complaisant frame of mind. As to the $2000 note the bank and subsequent holders have always contended that it was taken as collateral for Duncan's indebtedness. In 1932 it was shown on the bank records as collateral for a $2425 note of Duncan's, which appeared to have been a renewal of a prior note or notes. The bank sold said $2425 note and with it said $2000 note as collateral to W.F. Duvall on July 14, 1932, for value but after maturity.

In May, 1933, default having been made in payment of the $2000 note, W.F. Duvall, the then holder, caused the property herein involved to be advertised for sale under said deed of trust of May 11, 1927. The sale was advertised for June 9, 1933. On June 7th defendants herein filed an injunction suit in the Circuit Court of Bates County to prevent such sale. The petition in that suit alleged, among other things, that there never had been any consideration for said $2000 note and that it had not been delivered to the bank nor to Homer Duvall for the bank, but was only left with Homer Duvall "as the agent of plaintiffs (defendants here) to retain the same for safe keeping only." The petition in said injunction suit prayed a temporary injunction restraining the threatened sale and also a permanent injunction, cancellation of the note and deed of trust and general relief.

W.F. Duvall was not named as a defendant in the injunction suit, the named defendants therein being Homer Duvall, the bank and the sheriff who, as substitute trustee had advertised the sale (the named trustee having refused to act). W.F. Duvall is referred to in that petition as agent and president of the bank and it is alleged that the named defendants "or some one for them" caused the land to be advertised for sale. The petition alleged that the plaintiffs there, defendants here, did not know who then held said $2000 note. There was a full hearing of said injunction suit, so far at least as *Page 1134 concerned the prayer for temporary injunction, before the court on the morning of June 9th, the day on which the sale was advertised to be made. At that hearing defendants here, plaintiffs there, testified, as did Mrs. Duncan's brother-in-law. They are the same witnesses and the only witnesses who testified on behalf of defendants in the instant suit. W.F. Duvall, though not named as a defendant in the injunction suit, testified as a witness at said hearing, as did Homer Duvall. The evidence then taken is not before us, but it is clear from the record that the question of consideration was thoroughly gone into and that the Duncans gave substantially the same testimony on that question as at the trial of the instant case. Not only was that issue squarely presented by their petition in the injunction suit, but their then attorney, Mr. DeArmond, a reputable lawyer whose veracity is not here questioned (called as a witness by plaintiffs in this case), testified that in the injunction suit he thought the only ground on which he hoped he might obtain the injunction sought was the alleged want of consideration and that he went into that subject thoroughly.

At the close of that hearing the court denied the temporary injunction. No further proceedings were taken in court. The parties then all repaired to the bank where the $2650 note and the deed of trust securing same, through the foreclosure of which plaintiffs herein claim, were executed. The papers were dated June 1, 1933, but were executed and delivered June 9th and the deed of trust was acknowledged as of the latter date. Thereupon the advertised sale was "called off," as it was understood and agreed it should be, the $2000 note was canceled and the deed of trust securing it was released of record. The $2650 note and deed of trust included principal and accrued interest of the $2425 note and an item of $11.60 which Duncan owed the bank and which W.F. Duvall paid, Duncan receiving the credit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 S.W.2d 89, 341 Mo. 1129, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duvall-v-duncan-mo-1937.